Senior Maine Coon Care Checklist
A practical guide to daily, weekly, and long-term care
This checklist is designed to help Maine Coon owners monitor, support, and adapt care as their cat enters senior years. It does not replace veterinary advice – it helps you notice changes early and act appropriately.
For detailed explanations behind each item, see the full guide:
👉 Senior Maine Coon Care
🐾 Daily Senior Maine Coon Checks
Tick through these mentally each day.
- ☐ Is my cat moving comfortably after resting?
- ☐ Any hesitation standing up, walking, or climbing?
- ☐ Has appetite remained normal?
- ☐ Drinking habits unchanged?
- ☐ Using the litter tray normally (frequency + posture)?
- ☐ Grooming normally, without excessive licking or bald patches?
- ☐ Seeking warmth, comfort, and familiar resting spots?
- ☐ Behaviour and affection level consistent?
👉 Sudden changes = vet check recommended
- ☐ Weigh your senior Maine Coon at least once per month, using the same scales where possible, and note any consistent upward or downward trends
😴 Sleep & Rest Behaviour Check
Changes in sleep location and duration are often the earliest signs of discomfort or decline.
- ☐ Sleeping longer than usual (normal with age, but track changes)
- ☐ Choosing warmer or more enclosed spaces
- ☐ Avoiding previously favoured high resting spots
- ☐ Difficulty settling after lying down
🦴 Mobility & Joint Support Checklist
Review monthly, or sooner if changes appear.
- ☐ Reduced jumping onto high surfaces
- ☐ Slower or more deliberate movements
- ☐ Stiffness after sleep
- ☐ Preference for ground-level routes
Action steps:
- ☐ Introduce or maintain joint supplements (vet-approved)
- ☐ Add omega-3 (e.g., salmon oil) if tolerated
- ☐ Replace tall cat trees with lower-perch options
- ☐ Provide ramps or steps to favourite areas
- ☐ Add warm bedding or heated pads
Related reading:
👉 Maine Coon Health And Wellness
🩺 Subtle Signs Of Pain In Senior Maine Coons
- ☐ Sitting in a loaf position more often than usual
- ☐ Reluctance to be picked up or touched in specific areas
- ☐ Increased irritability during grooming
- ☐ Tail flicking when resting
- ☐ Reduced tolerance for handling
- ☐ Moving away rather than vocalising discomfort
➡️ These signs often appear before limping or obvious stiffness.
Sensory Decline Monitoring (Eyes, Hearing, Smell)
Owners often misinterpret sensory decline as “behavioural change.”
- ☐ Bumping into furniture more often
- ☐ Delayed response to visual cues, such as toys, hand movements, or people entering the room
- ☐ Increased hesitation at steps, thresholds, or unfamiliar surfaces
- ☐ Delayed response to sounds
- ☐ Startling easily
- ☐ Reduced interest in food due to smell changes
- ☐ Changes in response to sound (once responsive, now delayed)
- ☐ Staring into space or confusion at thresholds
The latter are subtle indicators of cognitive change, not just sensory.
➡️ Sudden sensory changes warrant veterinary assessment.
Eye & Vision Checks
Veterinary sources highlight vision changes in senior cats as a regular part of ageing.
- ☐ Watch for signs of vision changes (bumping into objects, reluctance to navigate obstacles)
🍽️ Diet & Hydration Checklist
Reassess every 3-6 months.
- ☐ Weight stable (no unexplained gain or loss)
- ☐ Muscle tone maintained
- ☐ No vomiting, diarrhoea, or appetite drop
- ☐ Drinking enough water
- ☐ Ribs, spine, or hip bones becoming more visible through the coat
- ☐ Muscle loss over the shoulders or the hips despite a stable appetite
- ☐ Sudden loss of previously present “belly fat”
Action steps:
- ☐ Prioritise high-quality protein
- ☐ Increase wet food if hydration is poor
- ☐ Use urinary or senior diets if recommended by a vet
- ☐ Avoid sudden food changes
- ☐ Multiple fresh water sources placed around the home
- ☐ Consider a cat water fountain to encourage drinking, especially if appetite remains good, but urine volume drops
- ☐ Weigh your senior cat at least monthly
- ☐ Track weight and body condition on a simple log
Senior feeding guidance:
👉 Maine Coon Diet And Nutrition
🌡️ Temperature & Environment Check
Senior Maine Coons are far more sensitive to cold.
- ☐ Warm bedding available year-round
- ☐ Heated pad used safely and supervised
- ☐ Drafts avoided
- ☐ Extra warmth provided in the winter months
🚽 Urinary & Litter Box Checklist
Check weekly.
- ☐ Normal urine volume
- ☐ No straining or crying
- ☐ Normal urine output should remain regular, pale yellow, and produced without visible straining, hesitation, or repeated box visits
- ☐ Sudden changes in frequency, volume, or effort may indicate urinary discomfort and should be monitored closely
- ☐ No frequent box visits
- ☐ No over-grooming of the genital area
Action steps:
- ☐ Keep boxes easily accessible
- ☐ Seek veterinary advice for any sudden change
- ☐ Low-entry litter trays are used to reduce joint strain
- ☐ Trays placed on non-slip surfaces
- ☐ Soft, fine-grain litter chosen for sensitive paws
- ☐ Additional trays added to avoid long walks or stairs
- ☐ Monitor for signs of hesitation before urination (can signal discomfort)
This is a frequent early indicator vets watch for urinary discomfort.
🪮 Grooming & Coat Care Checklist
Senior Maine Coons often struggle to groom fully.
- ☐ Check behind hind legs and under the belly weekly
- ☐ Look for mats forming near the backend
- ☐ Watch for irritation, redness, or dandruff
- ☐ Note defensive reactions during grooming (often pain-related)
Action steps:
- ☐ Short, gentle grooming sessions
- ☐ Remove small mats early
- ☐ Consider professional grooming if tolerance is low
More grooming guidance:
👉 Grooming And Care
🐾 Paw & Nail Care Checklist
Reduced activity = less natural nail wear → pain + altered gait
- ☐ Nails checked monthly
- ☐ Overgrown nails not catching on fabrics
- ☐ Paw pads free of cracking or dryness
- ☐ No limping caused by nail overgrowth
Action step:
- ☐ Trim nails more frequently in senior years
- ☐ Nails checked and trimmed more frequently in senior years
- ☐ Overgrown nails not catching on bedding or carpets
- ☐ Paw pads checked for dryness or cracking
🦷 Dental Health Checklist
Even if no problems are visible.
- ☐ No bad breath
- ☐ No drooling
- ☐ Eating normally
- ☐ No pawing at the mouth
Action steps:
- ☐ Schedule regular dental checks
- ☐ Budget for potential dental work
- ☐ Don’t assume “good teeth” in one cat applies to another
❤️ Heart & General Health Monitoring
Maine Coons are predisposed to certain silent conditions.
- ☐ No sudden weakness or collapse
- ☐ No unexplained breathing changes
- ☐ No sudden paralysis or pain
Action steps:
- ☐ Maintain regular vet checks (often twice yearly for seniors)
- ☐ Investigate subtle changes early
- ☐ Understand breed-specific risks
Regular Veterinary Test Reminders
Veterinarians recommend senior cats get bi-annual wellness exams with bloodwork, urinalysis, etc. to catch hidden diseases early.
- ☐ Schedule wellness exams every 6 months with bloodwork and urinalysis to screen for kidney, thyroid, heart, and other age-related conditions
🧠 Behaviour & Emotional Wellbeing Checklist
Normal senior changes include:
- ☐ Increased affection or clinginess
- ☐ Preference for routine
- ☐ Sensitivity to noise or disruption
- ☐ Increased sleeping
Action steps:
- ☐ Keep routines consistent
- ☐ Avoid unnecessary stress
- ☐ Prioritise comfort over stimulation
- ☐ Meals served at consistent times
- ☐ Sleep, play, and interaction routines kept predictable
- ☐ Household changes introduced gradually where possible
Cognitive & Behaviour Changes
Senior cats can experience cognitive shifts (disorientation, staring into space, altered interaction), which owners often misinterpret.
- ☐ Observe for confusion, repetitive behaviour, or changes in interaction patterns
- ☐ Note any disorientation (e.g., bumping into furniture or walking past familiar spots)
This helps catch early cognitive decline.
💊 Supplement & Medication Review
- ☐ Supplements are still well-tolerated
- ☐ No digestive upset after dosing
- ☐ No behaviour change linked to new products
- ☐ Review supplements with vet at least annually
When To Book A Vet Visit Immediately
- ⛔ Sudden weight loss
- ⛔ Persistent pain or stiffness
- ⛔ Excessive grooming with hair loss
- ⛔ Litter tray avoidance
- ⛔ Sudden behavioural change
- ⛔ Collapse or paralysis
End-Of-Life Planning
🕊️ Quality of Life Considerations
- ☐ Eating willingly
- ☐ Able to rest comfortably
- ☐ Seeking interaction
- ☐ Pain managed effectively
- ☐ More good days than bad
If several of these change over a short period, it’s a sign that a supportive veterinary conversation may be needed to reassess comfort and care options.
Quality-of-life assessments are about kindness, not timelines. Quality of life should always guide care decisions.
Final Note
This checklist is not about extending life at all costs – it’s about maintaining comfort, dignity, and quality of life as Maine Coons age.
Used alongside the full guide, it helps ensure nothing important is overlooked.
👉 Full senior care guide:
Senior Maine Coon Care
